LIVERPOOL, England – The Beatles are credited with putting this city
on the map. But long before Paul McCartney, John Lennon, Ringo Starr
and George Harrison conquered the music world in the mid-1960s, the
city of their birth was prominent on another map as one of the largest
slave trading centers in the world. “The estimate is that on
Liverpool ships alone, there were more than 1.5 million enslaved
Africans – that’s a low estimate,” Richard Benjamin, director of the
International Slavery Museum, told a delegation accompanying Jesse L.
Jackson to England. The museum, said to be the largest slave
museum outside of North America, is impressive and places many visitors
on the verge of tears as it recreates the horrors of slavery. To
put 1.5 million enslaved Africans into perspective, that’s larger than
the African-American population of every U.S. city except New York.
That’s more than the combined number of Blacks in Los Angeles and
Chicago. "What made Liverpool the most successful salve trading
city was it had dry docks, it had infrastructure to build the ships,
the people to command the ships and to make the goods that were sold –
it had everything. It was the ultimate business for Liverpool
merchants. And it took it to a different level than London and Bristol
and that’s why Liverpool became capital of the slave trade,” Benjamin
said as he showed visitors around the museum. A museum brochure
notes, “The first known slave ship to sail from Liverpool was Liverpool
Merchant, which left the port on 3 October 1699 and transported 220
Africans to Barbados. The trade grew slowly over the next 20 years but
then developed rapidly. “By 1750 Liverpool was sending more ships
to Africa than the other main slaving ports of Bristol and London put
together and the town’s ships dominated the trade until abolition in
1807. In the final 15 years of the trade being legal, Liverpool
controlled 80% of the British and over 40% of the European slave trade.” One
section of the museum seeks to simulate conditions on a packed
Trans-Atlantic voyage, with strong visuals, beatings, and even captured
Africans throwing up. Through it all, the exhibits make clear that
enslaved Africans resisted. Posted prominently in the museum is
a quote from William Prescott, a former slave: “They will remember that
we were sold, but not that we were strong. They will remember that we
were bought, but not that we were brave.” Fortunately, the museum
doesn’t limit its collections to slavery. It covers the U.S. Civil
Rights Movement in great detail, down to the sounds of barking dogs in
Birmingham through the Black Power Movement of the late 1960s. For
example, there is one video clip of a White supremacist saying, “They
all look at the White man as being the master and the (n-word) as being
the slave.” Immediately following that clip is an audio visual of Dr.
King saying, “A new Negro came into being with a new determination to
suffer, struggle, to sacrifice and even to die, if necessary, in order
to be free.” Posted on one wall is a poignant quote from Jesse
Owens, the star of the 1936 Olympics in Berlin. He said: “I wasn’t
invited to shake hands with Hitler, but I wasn’t invited to the White
House to shake hands with the President either.” Classes are held in the museum to teach students about slavery and how Europeans benefited from it. “A
lot of the people in the Black community said don’t let people leave
the museum equating Black history and African history with slavery,”
Benjamin recalled. “You also have to tell them of the many different
achievements and other aspects.” Consequently, a Black
achievement wall has short biographies of 76 descendants of Africa,
many of them Americans. The 77th – Barack Obama – will be added soon. Most
of the major streets in Liverpool, including Abbey Road popularized by
the Beatles, were named after famous slave traders. The museum has a
display of most of the street names with their connection to slavery. It
is estimated that between a third and one-half of Liverpool’s slave
trade between 1750 and 1807 was to Africa and the West Indies.
Approximately 40 percent of Liverpool’s wealth was derived from either
dealing in enslaved people or the goods they produced. At least 20
mayors of the city were directly involved in the slave trade. Benjamin,
the director of the museum, said there was some resistance to the
establishment of the museum in 2007. It was opened on August 23,
observed each year as Slavery Remembrance Day. “Don’t be under
the illusion that everyone in the city thought it was a good idea,”
Benjamin stated. “A lot of people were saying, ‘Okay, the past is the
past. Let’s move on.’ But the museum made the decision, ‘No, we need to
tell the story.’”
Next Column:
Civil Rights Movement Inspires Blacks Abroad
Back To Columns |